We are grieving a death. I understand that until you go through it, you probably can't imagine it - I know I couldn't, before it happened to me - but consider this a public service announcement. Whatever your intellectual thoughts on pregnancy and human life may be, I can assure you that the emotional experience for me and for Mike is not that I had a health-related mishap or a medical emergency, but that someone has died.
Every day gets easier, though. Sometimes a thought, a song, or the sight of a baby can send you reeling backwards with surprising force, but then you forge on again. I can't imagine how we would be coping if we didn't have each other and a strong marriage to fall back on... if we didn't have the solid and reliable power to make each other laugh, still, even on the worst days.
It's funny how, when you're pregnant, everything becomes in reference to pregnancy. Every food you eat, every move you make, every thought you think points back to I'm pregnant. When you lose a pregnancy, everything then points to I miscarried. One of the many, many random thoughts I've had in the last week and a half was, "What a time to cancel cable!" I thought there could be no worse time to lack the immediate & compelling escape of television. But for the one millionth time in life, I was wrong. The silence of the television has been unexpectedly pleasant. Instead we've spent our mornings and evenings listening (and even dancing) to music, talking, or just sitting quietly together. It's peaceful, and perhaps just what the doctor ordered.
3 comments:
What a well written post. It's true...one doesn't understand what it is like until s/he goes through it. In my experience it lingers much longer than you ever really thought it would. Or could or should.
Every day does get a little easier though and I'm so glad that you and Mike have each other through this tough time.
Hang in there!
Beautiful, Erin. I wish I could offer more than that. You are a strong woman.
Well said, Erin. I love this quote that somebody once told me about grief, "We never have the right to consider another person's grief as less difficult than ours." I love the reminder that if we consider everyone's loss as being as difficult as our most difficult loss than our compassion and sympathy will probably be appropriate. Loss is difficult and I am so glad that you and Mike have each other to hold onto!
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